rules it StO| jation International judge’s ruling k request for id jury investigi linal tax fraud k r will not end I]* :en GM and 4 t. Ige James Cl* sterday on Glfj ding was nottj. battle betweej ice Departmen! he investigation jected no raafc d to more tin mony from §«■, any lawyers list? THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1977 Page 5 Campus Names s filed it two months, rchill to y the grandjuiy V. res, contending sing used in /the IRS to of use later nt lawyers sad le control ovet ry even ; used as inver ts. et for just hu [hand jury pro ;e were hall went into f 00-page, foi nvestigation IRS civil audit ’5ofGM’s] rns. The had taken nore than S ols and ot o production, the grand jury ild not cooper leaning, Cll arino said tit nade a “[ gate GM’sin grand jury when th rned. IRS hadbeei I case against iuto company civil audit be was trying li itive powen ; to bestow 1 is ent lawyer “The graid icld over any 1 the govern i to conthi employes, r kers t/ed working foi rnd more» n ent, accord- rted by tlf e Insurance, of the U 'o percentii employed i» 9 per cer rkforce 1 -nment hai - 1948, ic empl of the lab® cent in Foods. A&M members dive for sunken ships Nautical archeology students and faculty from Texas A&M University are diving in waters around the world. Doctoral candidate Donald Keith from Chapel Hill, N.C. has gone to Korea to work on a National Geographic Society ex cavation. Graduate student Lisa Shuey of Kentfield, Calif., will aid in studies of a 12th-13th century Byzantine ship sunk off the southern coast of Turkey. Anthropology lecturer Richard Steffy is leading a summer field course excavating the wreck of the Defence, an American privateer scuttled in the Re volutionary War in Maine. Associate director to end 30-year job Joe H. Rothe, associate di rector of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service will retire Au gust 31 ending a career spanning 30 years. Rothe has served as assistant director, state agricultural agent, district Extension agent for two districts, county Extension agent, and assistant county agent since beginning his Extension educational career in 1947. Aggie continues career in air force Air Force Capt. Stephen A. Henry, a 1971 Texas A&M graduate, has entered the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright-Patterson air force base, Ohio, for graduate studies in sys tems management. Henry was a member of Squadron 14 in the Corps of Cadets. He was commissioned through the AFROTC program and studied under an Air Force scholarship. Professor attends Ft. Carlisle seminar An industrial enqineer pro fessor at Texas A&M spent a week at a fort where his grand mother stayed in the 1880’s. M.J. Fox, Jr. was one of 120 representatives attending the 23rd annual National Security Seminar held at Carlisle Bar racks, Penn., by the U.S. Army War College. Fox’s grandmother, a Creek Indian, lived at the fort when it was known as Carlisle Industrial Indian School. Extension members included in top 23 Three members of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station were among 23 scientists in the world who participated in an in ternational conference on breed ing plants resistant to insects June 20-24 in Bellagio, Italy. The scientists are considered top authorities in their fields. Dr. Perry L. Adkisson and Dr. George L. Teetes of the Texas A&M Entomology Department, and Dr. G.A. Niles of the Soil and Crop Sciences Department were invited to the meeting by the Rockefeller Foundation. PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLIES 707 TEXAS AVE., COLLEGE STATION OPEN 8>30-5>30 MON.-SAT. 846-5794 WE DO COPY WORK Unfinished Furniture Center Do It Yourself & Save “p ree stain Classes” 314 N. Main “Downtown” Bryan 822-7052 Family of authors tops best seller lists, sells total of over 108 million books United Press International HOLLYWOOD — The Wallace family sat down to lunch together after receiving news that their latest joint effort, “The Book of Lists,” was No. 1 among best sellers in Los Angeles. Patriarch living Wallace beamed happily at his collaborators: daugh ter Amy, 21, son David, 29, and wife Sylvia, whose blonde beauty makes her look younger than how ever many years she is. Irving, Amy and David re searched and wrote the new book. Sylvia, as always, did the editing. Together and individually, the Wallaces have sold some 108 million books in hard cover and paperback in the past two decades. Irving’s 11 novels and nine non-fiction books, of course, account for the bulk of that amazing total. But Sylvia’s best seller, “The Fountains,” combined with David’s What Really Happened to the Class of’65,” plus his share in “The People’s Almanac” account for early two million sales. Amy’s published contribution so far is her part in “The Book of Lists.” The family chatted happily in the Brown Derby, delighted by the news that “The Book of Lists” is sel ling merrily in the top 10 around the country. And while the Wallaces are a obstruction ^ose-knit unit, they currently are involved in individual writing pro jects. Not that they are a quartet concerto for typewriters under the same roof. Irving and Sylvia live in a Brentwood mansion. Amy lives in Berkeley, Calif., where she earns a Iving giving psychic readings. — Fewer® David, who changed his name to the family’s ancestral handle, Wal- lechinsky, lives in baronial splendor not far from his parents. Sylvia is working on a new novel. as is Irving. Amy has two new books about to be published, “The Two” and “The Psychic Healing Book.” “The Two,” written in collabora tion with her father, is the biog raphy of Chang and Eng, the origi nal Siamese Twins, to which she devoted two years of research. David is busy on “The People’s Almanac II.” He is a bearded, al most ascedic man endowed wdth wry humor. NBC has fashioned a weekly television series from his “What Really Happened to the Class of ’65” which makes its debut this fall. Altogether, the family has earned nearly $3 million in the past two and a half years, thanks in no small part to Irving’s “The R. Document,” Sylvia’s The Fountains,” David’s “Class of ’65” and “The People’s Almanac.” “We get a kick out of seeing our work displayed in book stores around the country,” Irving said. “Sometimes all four of our current hard cover books can be found on the same counter or in the same window.” The Wallaces read one another’s manuscripts before they are sent to their publishers, but never until the books are complete. “Sylvia is the best editor in the family,” Irving says flatly. “The children have natural writ ing talent. But I’m sure literary sur roundings, having author friends around the house and having par ents who write has influenced them somewhat,” Sylvia said. Amy spoke up. “I’m in awe of people who write books. I’m even awed that I’ve written a book. And someday I’d like to write a novel.” David, too, plans to produce a novel if he can take time from his work on the second almanac. “I didn’t grow up with the idea of Y :ial Beef m > and ther id Bull i flAL ■ING 4NNER ng utter- sny 5 remiere Players present play ‘The American Dame’ The Premiere Players have cast a veteran group for the teenage thea ter company’s first production of the summer. “The American Dame,” directed by Ms. Aileen Wenck, will run July 7-9 at Texas A&M. Cast in the production are Bill Gelber, Christy Claycamp, Mark Walker, Stuart Echols, Andy God- sey and Bobbin Olsen. “Dame” will be the fifth Premiere Players perfor mance for Olsen and Echols. A Bryan High School graduate like Walker and Olsen, Gelber has had considerable acting experience and is a Sam Houston State student. Echols and Claycamp are A&M Consolidated High School juniors. Also working on “Dame” in props and costumes are Mary Alice How ard and Ann Gelber, Bryan High juniors. Assistant director is David We- din, a Premiere Players “graduate.” The Sam Houston State sophomore will also handle sound and stage management. Godsey works in pub licity. Ms. Wenck noted that almost all the cast will play multiple roles in “Dame,” which will present the progress of American womanhood in a series of vignettes. Performances July 7-9 in the Rudder Forum start at 8 p.m. Ad mission will be $1.50 per adult and 75 cents for children under 14. Roomier Levi’s for big guys. Tom’s Pants has Levi’s made roomier in the thighs and seat espe cially for the big-sized man. They’re available in all cord uroy colors, jeans and in a pre-washed look. Sizes 40- 50. PLAITS 800 VILLA MARIA 823-8213 Across from Manor East Mall becoming a writer,” David said. “As a kid I wanted to be a cowboy. I still do. When I left high school I went to film school. “There’s no doubt the environ ment at home developed a respect for writing. When I write my novel it will be a different kind of book from Dad’s.” “There’s no better training in the world for a writer than keeping a journal,” said Wallace. “They are very private and never read by anyone else in the family. But read ing the childrens’ manuscripts has provided an insight into thier in terests and thoughts that I wouldn’t have known otherwise. BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION’S LEADING AUDIO DEALER TH£r‘S PROGRESS! VALUES TO $11.00 ONLY $3.99 Tank Tops & Fun Tops 9^’ ,9b Regular Bib Overalls P/ ?/C£- S9 *75 ^j^****^ ^-W 4-Way System incorporating a 12-inch Woofer, 4V2- inch Midrange & 1 Vz-inch Wide Dispersion LPF Dome Tweeter. Handles 250 watts. Sold separately this system would total $ 1270 00 $ oo CUSTOM SOUNDS SALE PRICE SALE GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY ONLY Here are two more WOOFER SPECIALS 2215 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER • 15 WATTS MINIMUM RMS PER CHANNEL AT 8 OHMS, FROM 40 Hz TO 20 kHz, WITH NO MORETHAN 0.8% TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION. • Phase Locked Loop (PLL) FM Multiplex Demodulator • Full Complementary Amplifier • Dual Purpose AM Signal Strength/FM “Center Channel” Tuning Meter • Tape Outputs for Two Tape Decks • Main/Remote Speaker Switching REG. $ 250 SALE $ 149 00 MODEL 6100 BELT DRIVE MANUAL TURNTABLE • Automatic Return and Shut-off at the end of play • Damped Cueing • Anti-Skating • Dust Cover and Base Included REG. $ 130 SALE $9900 CUSTOM SOUNDS 3806-A OLD COLLEGE ROAD (Next to Triangle Bowling Alley) OPEN 10-6 MON.-SAT. 846-5803